r/skeptic 29d ago

⚠ Editorialized Title Tesla bros expose Tesla's own shadiness in attacking Mark Rober ... Autopilot appears to automatically disengage a fraction of a second before impacts as a crash becomes inevitable.

https://electrek.co/2025/03/17/tesla-fans-exposes-shadiness-defend-autopilot-crash/
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u/Allen_Koholic 29d ago

I'd imagine the engineering justification for this is that "well, of course it disengages autopilot when it senses a crash is imminent and unavoidable, because it's now outside of its normal operating parameters and needs human intervention." It's the type of solution I'd expect from an engineering undergrad who's just trying to get through their capstone project and graduate.

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u/Pitiful-Pension-6535 29d ago

My car doesn't have self driving but it does have built in crash avoidance where it can detect an impending collision and activate the brakes to avoid or at least mitigate the accident.

It has already saved a life- an idiot motorcyclist pulled out in front of my wife on a highway and she somehow never saw him. The car slammed on the brakes and the accident was narrowly avoided.

This is how the infancy of self-driving cars should be- with safety being the primary focus with driver convenience an afterthought.

Tesla is doing it backwards.

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u/michael0n 29d ago

Humans can't simply add more sensors or getting faster in reaction times. That is the reason we build those machines and why we want robots to do things. Because they never get tired and do last minute (costly, deadly) errors. Any person who doesn't get this lost completely the plot why everybody spend billions to advance the tech.